Shale pioneer Chesapeake Energy files for bankruptcy
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[June 29, 2020] By
David French and Rama Venkat
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Chesapeake Energy Corp
<CHK.N> filed for Chapter 11 on Sunday, becoming the largest U.S. oil
and gas producer to seek bankruptcy protection in recent years as it
bowed to heavy debts and the impact of the coronavirus outbreak on
energy markets.
The filing marks an end of an era for the Oklahoma City-based shale
pioneer, and comes after months of negotiations with creditors. Reuters
first reported in March the company had retained debt advisers.
Chesapeake was co-founded by Aubrey McClendon, an early and high profile
advocate of shale drilling who died in 2016 in a fiery one-car crash in
Oklahoma while facing a federal probe into bid rigging. Over more than
two decades, McClendon built Chesapeake from a small wildcatter to a top
U.S. producer of natural gas. It remains the sixth-largest producer by
volume.
Current CEO Doug Lawler, who inherited a company saddled with about $13
billion in debt in 2013, managed to chip at the debt pile with spending
cuts and asset sales, but this year's historic oil price rout left
Chesapeake without the ability to refinance that debt.
"Despite having removed over $20 billion of leverage and financial
commitments, we believe this restructuring is necessary for the
long-term success and value creation of the business," Lawler said in a
statement announcing the filing.
Lawler last year spent $4 billion on an ill-timed push to reduce
Chesapeake's reliance on natural gas. The purchase sent its shares lower
and this year the value of Chesapeake's oil and gas holdings fell by
$700 million this quarter. The company last month warned it may not be
able to continue operations.
Chesapeake plans to eliminate approximately $7 billion of its debt, the
statement said. A separate court filing indicated that Chesapeake has
more than $10 billion in liabilities and assets, respectively.
Chesapeake's outlook plunged this year as the coronavirus outbreak and a
Saudi-Russia price war sharply cut energy prices and drove its
first-quarter losses to more than $8 billion. On Friday, its stock
traded at $11.85, down 93% since the start of the year, leaving it with
a market value of $116 million.
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Chesapeake Energy Corporation's 50 acre campus is seen in Oklahoma
City, Oklahoma, April 17, 2012. REUTERS/Steve Sisney
The company has entered into a restructuring support agreement, which has the
backing of lenders to its main revolving credit facility - some of which are
providing $925 million of debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing to help fund
operations during the bankruptcy proceedings.
The agreement also has backing from portions of other creditors, including those
behind 87% of its term loan, and holders of 60% and 27%, respectively, of its
senior secured second lien notes due 2025, and senior unsecured notes.
While the statement does not name Chesapeake's creditors, investment firm
Franklin Resources is among the most significant. On June 15, Reuters reported
that Chesapeake's impending restructuring would turn over control of the company
to creditors including Franklin.
Chesapeake also has agreed the principal terms for a $2.5 billion exit
financing, while some of its lenders and secured note holders have agreed to
backstop a $600 million offering of new shares, to take place upon exiting the
Chapter 11 process, the statement added.
Chesapeake's filing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas
makes it the largest bankruptcy of an U.S. oil and gas producer since at least
2015, when law firm Haynes & Boone began publishing data on restructurings.
Chesapeake's advisers are investment banks Rothschild & Co and Intrepid
Partners, law firm Kirkland & Ellis LLP, and turnaround specialists Alvarez &
Marsal.
(Reporting by David French in New York, Rama Venkat and Shariq Khan in Bengaluru
and Jennifer Hiller in Houston; editing by Diane Craft)
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